Short Q & A :
Q1: Name some of the recreational activities common in coastal areas.
Ans : Boating, water skiing, swimming, fishing, surfing, sun bathing and canoeing. In Kerala, snake boat races are held in connection with Onam, the harvest festival in August/September.
Q2: Write a short note on lava plateau.
Ans : Lava plateaus are formed by highly fluid (runny) basaltic lava during numerous successive eruptions through numerous vents without violent explosions (quiet eruptions). These eruptions are quiet because of low viscosity of lava and contains small amount of trapped gases. Multiple successive and extensive lava flows cover the original landscape to eventually form a plateau, which may contain lava fields, cinder cones, shield volcanoes and other volcanic landform.
Q3: Which are the two processes that lead to formation and development of landforms?
Ans : The two processes that lead to the formation of landforms are:
1. Internal Process: This process leads to the upliftment and sinking of the earth’s surface at several places. Example: block mountains
2. External Process: The external process is the continuous wearing down and rebuilding of the land surface. Examples: Barchans
Q4: How are volcanic mountains formed? Give few example of volcanic mountain.
Ans : Volcanic mountains are formed due to volcanic activity that is due to solidification of lava. Mt.Kilimanjaro in Africa and Mt. Fujiyama in Japan are examples of such mountains.
Q5: Differentiate between mountains and plateaus.
Ans : We should do following practices: (1) We should not construct buildings on the fertile land. (2) We should not throw garbage on the land or in water and make them dirty. (3) We should avoid using important gifts of nature in a careless manner.
Q6: How are mountains useful to man?
Ans : Deposition, also known as sedimentation, is the geological process whereby material is added to a landform. This is the process by which wind, water or ice transport previously eroded sediment, which, at the loss of enough kinetic energy in the fluid, is deposited another geographical location.
Q7: How are plains formed?
Ans :
MOUNTAIN | PLATEAU |
A steep hill with an elevation of more than six hundred meters is called mountain | A plateau is an elevated flat land standing above the surrounding area. |
It is considerably higher than the surrounding area. | It is relatively lower than the mountain |
These are of three types:Fold Mountain, Block Mountainand Volcanic Mountain | These are of two types: old and new |
Q8: Why the river plains are thickly populated?
Ans :
Mountains are very useful to man in the following ways:
Q9: What should we do to use the land and water properly?
Ans : Plains are formed by the rivers. The rivers erode the slopes of mountains and carry forward the eroded material. They then deposit their load consisting of stones and sand along their courses and in valleys. In this way the plains are formed.
Q10: Write a short notes on deposition.
Ans :
The river plains are thickly populated due to following reasons:
Q11: Why mountains are less populated?
Ans :
The mountains are thinly populated because
Q12: How are Block Mountains formed?
Ans : Block Mountains are formed when large areas of bedrock are widely broken up by faults creating large vertical displacements of continental crust. Vertical motion of the resulting blocks, sometimes accompanied by tilting, can then lead to high escarpments. These mountains are formed by the Earth's crust being stretched and extended by tensional forces. Fault block mountains commonly accompany rifting, another indicator of tensional tectonic forces. The uplifted blocks are called block mountains or horsts. The intervening dropped blocks are termed as graben. These can be small or form extensive rift valley systems. This form of landscape can be seen in East Africa, the Vosges, the Basin and Range province of Western North America, in south-central New England and the Rhine valley. These areas often occur when the regional stress is extensional and the crust is thinned
Q13: Describe the features of a volcano.
Ans : A volcano is an opening on the surface of the Earth from which magma, associated gases and ash erupt. Volcano has a magma chamber that is a huge bottomless pot of molten rock. The main channel through which magma moves towards the surface is the central vent. A crater sits at the top of a volcano and it is from here that much of the lava, gas, rock fragments and ash are ejected from. Volcanic cones arethe result of eruptions that erupt are mostly small pieces of rocks that build up cone around the vent.
Q14: What are the various uses of plateaus?
Ans :
Q15: Explain about the settlement pattern seen on the mountains.
Ans : Due to harsh climatic conditions, number of people living in mountain areas is less. Generally two types of housing pattern can be seen on mountains. One in which the houses are generally scattered mud houses with low roofs and have a lot of distance between houses. Second is clustered type, where all the houses are situated on a particular slope. The houses are generally wooden houses and may be joined wall to wall with each other.
Q16: Write the type of mountain of which following are examples of :
Ans :
Q17: How do mountains change climate of a place?
Ans : Mountainous areas have lower temperatures. They serve as climatic divide between two adjoining regions. The Himalaya for example forms a barrier to the movement of cold winds from Central Asia towards the Indian subcontinent. They also force the South West Monsoons to ascend and cause rainfall on their southern slopes.
Q18: Explain the two processes that lead to the formation and development of landforms.
Ans : The two processes that lead to the formation of landforms are:
1. Internal Processes: These processes lead to the upliftment and sinking of the earth’s surface at several places.
2. External Processes: The external process is the continuous wearing down and rebuilding of the land surface.
Long Q & A :
Q1: Explain the formation of plains.
Ans : Boating, water skiing, swimming, fishing, surfing, sun bathing and canoeing. In Kerala, snake boat races are held in connection with Onam, the harvest festival in August/September.
Q2: How are Fold Mountains formed
Ans : Lava plateaus are formed by highly fluid (runny) basaltic lava during numerous successive eruptions through numerous vents without violent explosions (quiet eruptions). These eruptions are quiet because of low viscosity of lava and contains small amount of trapped gases. Multiple successive and extensive lava flows cover the original landscape to eventually form a plateau, which may contain lava fields, cinder cones, shield volcanoes and other volcanic landform.
1. What are the major landforms of the Earth? |
2. How are mountains formed? |
3. What are plateaus and how are they formed? |
4. What are plains and how are they formed? |
5. How are valleys formed? |
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